Posted on 09/04/2011 7:23:18 AM PDT by Kaslin
Here are two gigantic concepts that will crack your head wide open.
Neal Gabler, a journalist at the Norman Lear Center of the University of Southern California, recently published in the New York Times the opinion that our society no longer thinks big, that there are no more intellectually challenging thoughts, and,
if a Marx or a Nietzsche were suddenly to appear, blasting his ideas, no one would pay the slightest attention, certainly not the general media.
Gabler is wrong on all counts. Not only have truly big ideas been advanced recently, but the mass media (apparently not the New York Times) have been discussing them.
Gabler must be channeling Oswald Spengler, who wrote in his Decline of the West:
In physics as in chemistry, in biology as in mathematics, the great masters are dead, and we are now experiencing the decrescendo of brilliant gleaners, who arrange, collect, and finish-off, like the Alexandrian scholars of the Roman age (pp. 424-425). [emphasis added]
Spengler wrote these words in 1918, and it would be almost impossible to write a more incorrect description of physics in 1918. All the great masters dead? Albert Einstein, the second greatest physicist of all time (only Isaac Newton was superior), was then at the height of his powers and had published his general theory of relativity just three years before. All the great masters dead? Charles Murray, in his fascinating book Human Accomplishment, has complied a list of the twenty greatest masters of physics in human history. Of these twenty, eight (Einstein, Rutherford, Bohr, J.J. Thomson, M. Curie, Fermi, Heisenberg, and Dirac) were alive in 1918.
Einstein rewrote physics. So he did, but it took a while before even his contemporary physicists accepted his rewrite. Quite a few of us are trying to rewrite physics today. I myself in 2005 published a Theory of Everything (TOE) in a leading British peer-reviewed physics journal. Many other physicists have done the same. (My theory is the correct one!)
The general public first became aware of Einstein the year after Spengler wrote his nonsense. This occurred when Sir Arthur Eddington confirmed Einsteins prediction of a shift in the apparent positions of the stars near the Sun. I and my fellow TOE constructors are still searching for our Eddington. My own TOE predicts that the cosmic microwave background radiation should consist not of photons, but of pseudo-photons that will not interact with electrons and protons of the wrong spin. A simple experiment would show this. I in fact claim that this property has already been seen in the large number of ultra high energy cosmic rays (on the photon theory, these shouldnt exist), and in the fact that cosmic microwave particles pass through galactic cores twice as easily as they would if they were photons (technically, this is called the Sunyaev-Zeldovich anomaly). Similarly, Einstein had shown before Eddington that his theory explained precisely an unexplained anomaly in the position of the planet Mercury.
In contrast to Einstein and his contemporary physicists, we modern physicists rush out and explain our theories to the general pubic while we are developing them.
I just did.
And we modern physicists are more ambitious that Einstein. We put forward Theories of EVERYTHING, theories that explain ALL forces and particles. Einstein was trying merely to unify gravity with electromagnetism.
And our reality is infinitely bigger than Einsteins. We modern quantum physicists claim that reality is not a mere universe, but an uncountable infinity of universes just like our own. Dont tell me that this is not BIG idea!
In fact, its not only a big idea, its an idea as revolutionary as Copernicuss idea. Yet Gabler and the the New York Times are unaware of it. Yet many physicists have not only described it in technical articles, but also in popular articles, and even on television! See me and others describe it this September on the TV show Through the Wormhole with Morgan Freeman. It is absolutely false as Gabler writes: Intellectuals would even occasionally be invited to the couches of late-night talk shows. How long ago that was. Ive been on talk shows. And the great Cal Tech physicist Kip Thorne is even today working on a movie about black holes with Steven Spielberg.
Then there is transhumanism: the evidence is very strong that sometime in this century (I predict by 2030, Ray Kurzweil by 2045) we will see the creation of computer programs that are fully equal to humans in mental ability. At roughly the same time, we predict that humans will be able to download themselves into computers, and live forever.
I myself have argued that a partnership between the artificial intelligences and human downloads will expand out from the Earth and eventually engulf the entire universe, taking control of the entire universe.
I challenge you to show any previous time in human history that advanced such big ideas.
Nothing scares me more than the thought of living forever.... particularly in a machine....
I’d rather travel through time - that would be cool.
“Charles Murray, in his fascinating book Human Accomplishment, has complied a list of the twenty greatest masters of physics in human history. Of these twenty, eight (Einstein, Rutherford, Bohr, J.J. Thomson, M. Curie, Fermi, Heisenberg, and Dirac) were alive in 1918.”
Not sure how Richard Feynman got left off this list, but he was born in 1918.
Living forever is liberal’s desire of not having to answer to God.
never thought of that - very true
The original Easter.
With respect to Heir Tipler, I concur that BIG IDEAS are far from dead.
Here is one BIG PRACTICAL FEASIBLE IDEA that transforms the American Civilization to future unparalleled glory consistent with the BIG IDEAS established by its FOUNDERS:
http://www.fairtax.org/site/PageServer?pagename=about_faq
Study, Study, Study and Ask Questions.
Big idea:
Scrap all taxes. Income taxes. Corporate taxes. Sales tax. Capital gains tax. Property tax.
All of them. Eliminate every tax, and all the bureaucracies paid for by taxpayers, which support the tax monster.
Replace our entire tax code, with one single 100% import tariff.
No loopholes. No favoritism.
Just one single, across the board import tariff.
The Norman Lear Center at USC? What do they study there? Reruns of Maude?
The problem with the Norman Lear Center is too much inbred thinking. They keep it all in the family.
That, is a good one.
Gabler sounds like an idiot.
# Frederik Pohl's story "The Tunnel Under the World" (1955).
# Isaac Asimov's short story The Last Question (1956).
# Arthur C. Clarke's The City and the Stars (1956).
Once again science fiction writers get the drop on modern physicists. Arthur C. Clarke wrote a short story which featured communications satellites in geosynchronous orbit in 1945.
Regards,
GtG
I seem to recall him as the rep of some left wing media watchdog, spouting nonsense on some cable panel show. He was David Brock before David Brock was.
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